Big Oil's Net-Zero Gamble: How Petrochemical Firms Can Actually Decarbonize
A new study reveals how one petrochemical company is structuring its climate transition through three distinct project types—each playing a different role in reaching net-zero. The research suggests strategic sequencing could unlock faster decarbonization, offering a roadmap for carbon-intensive industries navigating the transition away from fossil fuels.
Originaltitel: Niche-regime negotiations in transition-oriented programs: aiming for net-zero in a petrochemical firm
<p>This paper combines literature on program management and the multi-level perspective on sustainability transitions to analyze how a firm within the petrochemical industry negotiates across niches and regimes in its transition-oriented program. The analysis shows that this strategic change program comprises three types of projects—exploitation, exploration, and hybrid. In the context of the firms’ ambition to attain net-zero emissions, individual projects of all three types play distinctive roles. In exploitation projects, negotiations stay at the regime level, which reinforces existing institutions but also enables a transfer of certain emission-reducing technologies. In contrast, exploration and hybrid projects entail negotiations that cut across niche and regime levels. For hybrid projects, we find that niche-regime negotiations remain predominantly internal, while they are externalized in exploration projects. Clarifying the relationship between internal and external negotiations, our work suggests that strategic project sequencing could facilitate transition-oriented programs. Run in sequence, exploration projects may help mobilize external support and resources, hybrid projects can safeguard internal support, and exploitation projects can enable companywide diffusion of practices that support the net-zero objectives. Copyright © 2026. Published by Elsevier Ltd.</p>